1LIBPIPELINE(3) GNU Library Functions Manual LIBPIPELINE(3)
2
4 libpipeline — pipeline manipulation library
5
7 #include <pipeline.h>
8
10 libpipeline is a C library for setting up and running pipelines of pro‐
11 cesses, without needing to involve shell command-line parsing which is
12 often error-prone and insecure. This relieves programmers of the need to
13 laboriously construct pipelines using lower-level primitives such as fork
14 and execve.
15
16 The general way to use libpipeline involves constructing a pipeline
17 structure and adding one or more pipecmd structures to it. A pipecmd
18 represents a subprocess (or “command”), while a pipeline represents a
19 sequence of subprocesses each of whose outputs is connected to the next
20 one's input, as in the example ls | grep pattern | less. The calling
21 program may adjust certain properties of each command independently, such
22 as its environment and nice(3) priority, as well as properties of the
23 entire pipeline such as its input and output and the way signals are han‐
24 dled while executing it. The calling program may then start the pipe‐
25 line, read output from it, wait for it to complete, and gather its exit
26 status.
27
28 Strings passed as const char * function arguments will be copied by the
29 library.
30
31 Functions to build individual commands
32 pipecmd *pipecmd_new(const char *name)
33
34 Construct a new command representing execution of a program called
35 name.
36
37 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_argv(const char *name, va_list argv)
38 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_args(const char *name, ...)
39
40 Convenience constructors wrapping pipecmd_new() and pipecmd_arg().
41 Construct a new command representing execution of a program called
42 name with arguments. Terminate arguments with NULL.
43
44 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_argstr(const char *argstr)
45
46 Split argstr on whitespace to construct a command and arguments,
47 honouring shell-style single-quoting, double-quoting, and back‐
48 slashes, but not other shell evilness like wildcards, semicolons,
49 or backquotes. This is included only to support situations where
50 command arguments are encoded into configuration files and the
51 like. While it is safer than system(3), it still involves signifi‐
52 cant string parsing which is inherently riskier than avoiding it
53 altogether. Please try to avoid using it in new code.
54
55 typedef void pipecmd_function_type (void *);
56 typedef void pipecmd_function_free_type (void *);
57 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_function(const char *name,
58 pipecmd_function_type *func, pipecmd_function_free_type *free_func,
59 void *data)
60
61 Construct a new command that calls a given function rather than
62 executing a process.
63
64 The data argument is passed as the function's only argument, and
65 will be freed before returning using free_func (if non-NULL).
66
67 pipecmd_* functions that deal with arguments cannot be used with
68 the command returned by this function.
69
70 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_sequencev(const char *name, va_list cmdv)
71 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_sequence(const char *name, ...)
72
73 Construct a new command that itself runs a sequence of commands,
74 supplied as command * arguments following name and terminated by
75 NULL. The commands will be executed in forked children; if any
76 exits non-zero then it will terminate the sequence, as with "&&" in
77 shell.
78
79 pipecmd_* functions that deal with arguments cannot be used with
80 the command returned by this function.
81
82 pipecmd *pipecmd_new_passthrough(void)
83
84 Return a new command that just passes data from its input to its
85 output.
86
87 pipecmd *pipecmd_dup(pipecmd *cmd)
88
89 Return a duplicate of a command.
90
91 void pipecmd_arg(pipecmd *cmd, const char *arg)
92
93 Add an argument to a command.
94
95 void pipecmd_argf(pipecmd *cmd, const char *format, ...)
96
97 Convenience function to add an argument with printf substitutions.
98
99 void pipecmd_argv(pipecmd *cmd, va_list argv)
100 void pipecmd_args(pipecmd *cmd, ...)
101
102 Convenience functions wrapping pipecmd_arg() to add multiple argu‐
103 ments at once. Terminate arguments with NULL.
104
105 void pipecmd_argstr(pipecmd *cmd, const char *argstr)
106
107 Split argstr on whitespace to add a list of arguments, honouring
108 shell-style single-quoting, double-quoting, and backslashes, but
109 not other shell evilness like wildcards, semicolons, or backquotes.
110 This is included only to support situations where command arguments
111 are encoded into configuration files and the like. While it is
112 safer than system(3), it still involves significant string parsing
113 which is inherently riskier than avoiding it altogether. Please
114 try to avoid using it in new code.
115
116 void pipecmd_get_nargs(pipecmd *cmd)
117
118 Return the number of arguments to this command. Note that this
119 includes the command name as the first argument, so the command
120 ‘echo foo bar’ is counted as having three arguments.
121
122 void pipecmd_nice(pipecmd *cmd, int value)
123
124 Set the nice(3) value for this command. Defaults to 0. Errors
125 while attempting to set the nice value are ignored, aside from
126 emitting a debug message.
127
128 void pipecmd_discard_err(pipecmd *cmd, int discard_err)
129
130 If discard_err is non-zero, redirect this command's standard error
131 to /dev/null. Otherwise, and by default, pass it through. This is
132 usually a bad idea.
133
134 void pipecmd_chdir(pipecmd *cmd, const char *directory)
135
136 Change the working directory to directory while running this com‐
137 mand.
138
139 void pipecmd_fchdir(pipecmd *cmd, int directory_fd)
140
141 Change the working directory to the directory given by the open
142 file descriptor directory_fd while running this command.
143
144 void pipecmd_setenv(pipecmd *cmd, const char *name, const char *value)
145
146 Set environment variable name to value while running this command.
147
148 void pipecmd_unsetenv(pipecmd *cmd, const char *name)
149
150 Unset environment variable name while running this command.
151
152 void pipecmd_clearenv(pipecmd *cmd)
153
154 Clear the environment while running this command. (Note that envi‐
155 ronment operations work in sequence; pipecmd_clearenv followed by
156 pipecmd_setenv causes the command to have just a single environment
157 variable set.) Beware that this may cause unexpected failures, for
158 example if some of the contents of the environment are necessary to
159 execute programs at all (say, PATH).
160
161 void pipecmd_pre_exec(pipecmd *cmd, pipecmd_function_type *func,
162 pipecmd_function_free_type *free_func, void *data)
163
164 Install a pre-exec handler. This will be run immediately before
165 executing the command's payload (process or function). Pass NULL
166 to clear any existing pre-exec handler. The data argument is
167 passed as the function's only argument, and will be freed before
168 returning using free_func (if non-NULL).
169
170 This is similar to pipeline_install_post_fork, except that is spe‐
171 cific to a single command rather than installing a global handler,
172 and it runs slightly later (immediately before exec rather than
173 immediately after fork).
174
175 void pipecmd_sequence_command(pipecmd *cmd, pipecmd *child)
176
177 Add a command to a sequence created using pipecmd_new_sequence().
178
179 void pipecmd_dump(pipecmd *cmd, FILE *stream)
180
181 Dump a string representation of a command to stream.
182
183 char *pipecmd_tostring(pipecmd *cmd)
184
185 Return a string representation of a command. The caller should
186 free the result.
187
188 void pipecmd_exec(pipecmd *cmd)
189
190 Execute a single command, replacing the current process. Never
191 returns, instead exiting non-zero on failure.
192
193 void pipecmd_free(pipecmd *cmd)
194
195 Destroy a command. Safely does nothing if cmd is NULL.
196
197 Functions to build pipelines
198 pipeline *pipeline_new(void)
199
200 Construct a new pipeline.
201
202 pipeline *pipeline_new_commandv(pipecmd *cmd1, va_list cmdv)
203 pipeline *pipeline_new_commands(pipecmd *cmd1, ...)
204
205 Convenience constructors wrapping pipeline_new() and
206 pipeline_command(). Construct a new pipeline consisting of the
207 given list of commands. Terminate commands with NULL.
208
209 pipeline *pipeline_new_command_argv(const char *name, va_list argv)
210 pipeline *pipeline_new_command_args(const char *name, ...)
211
212 Construct a new pipeline and add a single command to it.
213
214 pipeline *pipeline_join(pipeline *p1, pipeline *p2)
215
216 Joins two pipelines, neither of which are allowed to be started.
217 Discards want_out, want_outfile, and outfd from p1, and want_in,
218 want_infile, and infd from p2.
219
220 void pipeline_connect(pipeline *source, pipeline *sink, ...)
221
222 Connect the input of one or more sink pipelines to the output of a
223 source pipeline. The source pipeline may be started, but in that
224 case pipeline_want_out() must have been called with a negative fd;
225 otherwise, calls pipeline_want_out(source, -1). In any event,
226 calls pipeline_want_in(sink, -1) on all sinks, none of which are
227 allowed to be started. Terminate arguments with NULL.
228
229 This is an application-level connection; data may be intercepted
230 between the pipelines by the program before calling
231 pipeline_pump(), which sets data flowing from the source to the
232 sinks. It is primarily useful when more than one sink pipeline is
233 involved, in which case the pipelines cannot simply be concatenated
234 into one.
235
236 The result is similar to tee(1), except that output can be sent to
237 more than two places and can easily be sent to multiple processes.
238
239 void pipeline_command(pipeline *p, pipecmd *cmd)
240
241 Add a command to a pipeline.
242
243 void pipeline_command_argv(pipeline *p, const char *name, va_list argv)
244 void pipeline_command_args(pipeline *p, const char *name, ...)
245
246 Construct a new command and add it to a pipeline in one go.
247
248 void pipeline_command_argstr(pipeline *p, const char *argstr)
249
250 Construct a new command from a shell-quoted string and add it to a
251 pipeline in one go. See the comment against pipecmd_new_argstr()
252 above if you're tempted to use this function.
253
254 void pipeline_commandv(pipeline *p, va_list cmdv)
255 void pipeline_commands(pipeline *p, ...)
256
257 Convenience functions wrapping pipeline_command() to add multiple
258 commands at once. Terminate arguments with NULL.
259
260 void pipeline_want_in(pipeline *p, int fd)
261 void pipeline_want_out(pipeline *p, int fd)
262
263 Set file descriptors to use as the input and output of the whole
264 pipeline. If non-negative, fd is used directly as a file descrip‐
265 tor. If negative, pipeline_start() will create pipes and store the
266 input writing half and the output reading half in the pipeline's
267 infd or outfd field as appropriate. The default is to leave input
268 and output as stdin and stdout unless pipeline_want_infile() or
269 pipeline_want_outfile() respectively has been called.
270
271 Calling these functions supersedes any previous call to
272 pipeline_want_infile() or pipeline_want_outfile() respectively.
273
274 void pipeline_want_infile(pipeline *p, const char *file)
275 void pipeline_want_outfile(pipeline *p, const char *file)
276
277 Set file names to open and use as the input and output of the whole
278 pipeline. This may be more convenient than supplying file descrip‐
279 tors, and guarantees that the files are opened with the same privi‐
280 leges under which the pipeline is run.
281
282 Calling these functions (even with NULL, which returns to the
283 default of leaving input and output as stdin and stdout) supersedes
284 any previous call to pipeline_want_in() or pipeline_want_outfile()
285 respectively.
286
287 The given files will be opened when the pipeline is started. If an
288 output file does not already exist, it is created (with mode 0666
289 modified in the usual way by umask); if it does exist, then it is
290 truncated.
291
292 void pipeline_ignore_signals(pipeline *p, int ignore_signals)
293
294 If ignore_signals is non-zero, ignore SIGINT and SIGQUIT in the
295 calling process while the pipeline is running, like system(3).
296 Otherwise, and by default, leave their dispositions unchanged.
297
298 int pipeline_get_ncommands(pipeline *p)
299
300 Return the number of commands in this pipeline.
301
302 pipecmd *pipeline_get_command(pipeline *p, int n)
303
304 Return command number n from this pipeline, counting from zero, or
305 NULL if n is out of range.
306
307 pipecmd *pipeline_set_command(pipeline *p, int n, pipecmd *cmd)
308
309 Set command number n in this pipeline, counting from zero, to cmd,
310 and return the previous command in that position. Do nothing and
311 return NULL if n is out of range.
312
313 pid_t pipeline_get_pid(pipeline *p, int n)
314
315 Return the process ID of command number n from this pipeline,
316 counting from zero. The pipeline must be started. Return -1 if n
317 is out of range or if the command has already exited and been
318 reaped.
319
320 FILE *pipeline_get_infile(pipeline *p)
321 FILE *pipeline_get_outfile(pipeline *p)
322
323 Get streams corresponding to infd and outfd respectively. The
324 pipeline must be started.
325
326 void pipeline_dump(pipeline *p, FILE *stream)
327
328 Dump a string representation of p to stream.
329
330 char *pipeline_tostring(pipeline *p)
331
332 Return a string representation of p. The caller should free the
333 result.
334
335 void pipeline_free(pipeline *p)
336
337 Destroy a pipeline and all its commands. Safely does nothing if p
338 is NULL. May wait for the pipeline to complete if it has not
339 already done so.
340
341 Functions to run pipelines and handle signals
342 typedef void pipeline_post_fork_fn (void);
343 void pipeline_install_post_fork(pipeline_post_fork_fn *fn)
344
345 Install a post-fork handler. This will be run in any child process
346 immediately after it is forked. For instance, this may be used for
347 cleaning up application-specific signal handlers. Pass NULL to
348 clear any existing post-fork handler.
349
350 See pipecmd_pre_exec for a similar facility limited to a single
351 command rather than global to the calling process.
352
353 void pipeline_start(pipeline *p)
354
355 Start the processes in a pipeline. Installs this library's SIGCHLD
356 handler if not already installed. Calls error (FATAL) on error.
357
358 The standard file descriptors (0, 1, and 2) must be open before
359 calling this function.
360
361 int pipeline_wait_all(pipeline *p, int **statuses, int *n_statuses)
362
363 Wait for a pipeline to complete. Set *statuses to a newly-allo‐
364 cated array of wait statuses, as returned by waitpid(2), and
365 *n_statuses to the length of that array. The return value is simi‐
366 lar to the exit status that a shell would return, with some modifi‐
367 cations. If the last command exits with a signal (other than
368 SIGPIPE, which is considered equivalent to exiting zero), then the
369 return value is 128 plus the signal number; if the last command
370 exits normally but non-zero, then the return value is its exit sta‐
371 tus; if any other command exits non-zero, then the return value is
372 127; otherwise, the return value is 0. This means that the return
373 value is only 0 if all commands in the pipeline exit successfully.
374
375 int pipeline_wait(pipeline *p)
376
377 Wait for a pipeline to complete and return its combined exit sta‐
378 tus, calculated as for pipeline_wait_all().
379
380 int pipeline_run(pipeline *p)
381
382 Start a pipeline, wait for it to complete, and free it, all in one
383 go.
384
385 void pipeline_pump(pipeline *p, ...)
386
387 Pump data among one or more pipelines connected using
388 pipeline_connect() until all source pipelines have reached end-of-
389 file and all data has been written to all sinks (or failed). All
390 relevant pipelines must be supplied: that is, no pipeline that has
391 been connected to a source pipeline may be supplied unless that
392 source pipeline is also supplied. Automatically starts all pipe‐
393 lines if they are not already started, but does not wait for them.
394 Terminate arguments with NULL.
395
396 Functions to read output from pipelines
397 In general, output is returned as a pointer into a buffer owned by the
398 pipeline, which is automatically freed when pipeline_free() is called.
399 This saves the caller from having to explicitly free individual blocks of
400 output data.
401
402 const char *pipeline_read(pipeline *p, size_t *len)
403
404 Read len bytes of data from the pipeline, returning the data block.
405 len is updated with the number of bytes read.
406
407 const char *pipeline_peek(pipeline *p, size_t *len)
408
409 Look ahead in the pipeline's output for len bytes of data, return‐
410 ing the data block. len is updated with the number of bytes read.
411 The starting position of the next read or peek is not affected by
412 this call.
413
414 size_t pipeline_peek_size(pipeline *p)
415
416 Return the number of bytes of data that can be read using
417 pipeline_read() or pipeline_peek() solely from the peek cache,
418 without having to read from the pipeline itself (and thus poten‐
419 tially block).
420
421 void pipeline_peek_skip(pipeline *p, size_t len)
422
423 Skip over and discard len bytes of data from the peek cache.
424 Asserts that enough data is available to skip, so you may want to
425 check using pipeline_peek_size() first.
426
427 const char *pipeline_readline(pipeline *p)
428
429 Read a line of data from the pipeline, returning it.
430
431 const char *pipeline_peekline(pipeline *p)
432
433 Look ahead in the pipeline's output for a line of data, returning
434 it. The starting position of the next read or peek is not affected
435 by this call.
436
437 Signal handling
438 libpipeline installs a signal handler for SIGCHLD, and collects the exit
439 status of child processes in pipeline_wait(). Applications using this
440 library must either refrain from changing the disposition of SIGCHLD (in
441 other words, must rely on libpipeline for all child process handling) or
442 else must make sure to restore libpipeline's SIGCHLD handler before call‐
443 ing any of its functions.
444
445 If the ignore_signals flag is set in a pipeline (which is the default),
446 then the SIGINT and SIGQUIT signals will be ignored in the parent process
447 while child processes are running. This mirrors the behaviour of
448 system(3).
449
450 libpipeline leaves child processes with the default disposition of
451 SIGPIPE, namely to terminate the process. It ignores SIGPIPE in the par‐
452 ent process while running pipeline_pump().
453
454 Reaping of child processes
455 libpipeline installs a SIGCHLD handler that will attempt to reap child
456 processes which have exited. This calls waitpid(2) with -1, so it will
457 reap any child process, not merely those created by way of this library.
458 At present, this means that if the calling program forks other child pro‐
459 cesses which may exit while a pipeline is running, the program is not
460 guaranteed to be able to collect exit statuses of those processes.
461
462 You should not rely on this behaviour, and in future it may be modified
463 either to reap only child processes created by this library or to provide
464 a way to return foreign statuses to the application. Please contact the
465 author if you have an example application and would like to help design
466 such an interface.
467
469 If the PIPELINE_DEBUG environment variable is set to “1”, then
470 libpipeline will emit debugging messages on standard error.
471
472 If the PIPELINE_QUIET environment variable is set to any value, then
473 libpipeline will refrain from printing an error message when a subprocess
474 is terminated by a signal.
475
477 In the following examples, function names starting with pipecmd_ or
478 pipeline_ are real libpipeline functions, while any other function names
479 are pseudocode.
480
481 The simplest case is simple. To run a single command, such as mv source
482 dest:
483
484 pipeline *p = pipeline_new_command_args ("mv", source, dest, NULL);
485 int status = pipeline_run (p);
486
487 libpipeline is often used to mimic shell pipelines, such as the following
488 example:
489
490 zsoelim < input-file | tbl | nroff -mandoc -Tutf8
491
492 The code to construct this would be:
493
494 pipeline *p;
495 int status;
496
497 p = pipeline_new ();
498 pipeline_want_infile (p, "input-file");
499 pipeline_command_args (p, "zsoelim", NULL);
500 pipeline_command_args (p, "tbl", NULL);
501 pipeline_command_args (p, "nroff", "-mandoc", "-Tutf8", NULL);
502 status = pipeline_run (p);
503
504 You might want to construct a command more dynamically:
505
506 pipecmd *manconv = pipecmd_new_args ("manconv", "-f", from_code,
507 "-t", "UTF-8", NULL);
508 if (quiet)
509 pipecmd_arg (manconv, "-q");
510 pipeline_command (p, manconv);
511
512 Perhaps you want an environment variable set only while running a certain
513 command:
514
515 pipecmd *less = pipecmd_new ("less");
516 pipecmd_setenv (less, "LESSCHARSET", lesscharset);
517
518 You might find yourself needing to pass the output of one pipeline to
519 several other pipelines, in a “tee” arrangement:
520
521 pipeline *source, *sink1, *sink2;
522
523 source = make_source ();
524 sink1 = make_sink1 ();
525 sink2 = make_sink2 ();
526 pipeline_connect (source, sink1, sink2, NULL);
527 /* Pump data among these pipelines until there's nothing left. */
528 pipeline_pump (source, sink1, sink2, NULL);
529 pipeline_free (sink2);
530 pipeline_free (sink1);
531 pipeline_free (source);
532
533 Maybe one of your commands is actually an in-process function, rather
534 than an external program:
535
536 pipecmd *inproc = pipecmd_new_function ("in-process", &func,
537 NULL, NULL);
538 pipeline_command (p, inproc);
539
540 Sometimes your program needs to consume the output of a pipeline, rather
541 than sending it all to some other subprocess:
542
543 pipeline *p = make_pipeline ();
544 const char *line;
545
546 pipeline_want_out (p, -1);
547 pipeline_start (p);
548 line = pipeline_peekline (p);
549 if (!strstr (line, "coding: UTF-8"))
550 printf ("Unicode text follows:0);
551 while (line = pipeline_readline (p))
552 printf (" %s", line);
553 pipeline_free (p);
554
556 fork(2), execve(2), system(3), popen(3).
557
559 Most of libpipeline was written by Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org>,
560 originally for use in man-db. The initial version was based very loosely
561 on the run_pipeline() function in GNU groff, written by James Clark
562 <jjc@jclark.com>. It also contains library code by Markus Armbruster,
563 and by various contributors to Gnulib.
564
565 libpipeline is licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 3
566 or later. See the README file for full details.
567
569 Using this library in a program which runs any other child processes
570 and/or installs its own SIGCHLD handler is unlikely to work.
571
572GNU October 11, 2010 GNU